SCHUMAN, P. J.
Plaintiff sustained serious injuries when the Chevrolet Cavalier he was driving accelerated out of control, left the road, and rolled over. According to plaintiff, the accident resulted from the driver's side floor mat sliding forward and interfering with his ability to operate the accelerator and brake. He brought this action alleging common-law negligence and product liability against defendant Power Chevrolet, the dealership that sold the car to plaintiff's then-girlfriend.
Summary judgment is appropriate when "there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and * * * the moving party is entitled to prevail as a matter of law." ORCP 47 C. The record, which we review on summary judgment in the manner most favorable to the nonmoving party, id., establishes the following facts. Plaintiff's girlfriend, Lukawitz, bought her Chevrolet Cavalier from defendant. The model she bought was a "base" model, that is, a model without most optional features. As relevant to this case, the model had neither floor mats nor a floor mat retention
On one occasion before the accident that caused plaintiff's injuries, he became aware that the floor mats could be dangerous when, in his words, the "floor mat got caught in between the brake and the gas" while he was driving, causing the car to "just floor[] itself," so that plaintiff had to reach down and pull the mat away from the pedals in order to regain control. After that incident, plaintiff removed the floor mats, but somebody — the record does not reveal who — reinstalled them. Thereafter, Lukawitz noticed the floor mats slipping forward, and they were removed again. Again, some unknown person reinstalled them. They were still in the car when, in April 2008, while plaintiff was driving in rural Polk County, the floor mat slid forward, causing the car to accelerate. Plaintiff was unable to control the acceleration; the car fishtailed, left the road, and rolled over. Plaintiff suffered serious injuries in the accident, rendering him quadriplegic. He testified that, at the time of the accident, he did not know that the floor mats had been reinstalled and that, if he had known that fact, he would have taken them out.
In his first complaint, plaintiff asserted claims in product liability and common-law negligence on the theory that defendant sold a defective product: the vehicle with an installed floor mat. The complaint also named Remington Industries, Inc., as the manufacturer of the floor mats. Defendant filed a motion for summary judgment, asserting that the floor mat was not part of the vehicle as sold; it was an after-market product. That fact, defendant argued, entitled it to summary judgment under the "alteration or modification" defense in ORS 30.915. That statute provides:
The same statute, defendant reasoned, entitled it to summary judgment on plaintiff's common-law negligence claim as well as his product liability claim; the statute applies to any "product liability civil action" as defined in ORS 30.900,
To prevail on his ORCP 47 E argument, plaintiff must establish that his affidavit created a "genuine issue of material fact." The affidavit stated,
Generally, an ORCP 47 E affidavit "does not have to recite on what issues the expert will testify. It need state only that an expert has been retained and is available and willing to testify to admissible facts or opinions that would create a question of fact." Moore v. Kaiser Permanente, 91 Or.App. 262, 265, 754 P.2d 615, rev. den., 306 Or. 661, 763 P.2d 152 (1988). However, the court noted an exception to that general rule:
Id. (emphasis in original); accord Piskorski v. Ron Tonkin Toyota, Inc., 179 Or.App. 713, 718, 41 P.3d 1088 (2002); Stotler v. MTD Products, Inc., 149 Or.App. 405, 409 n. 3, 943 P.2d 220 (1997).
Here, defendant argues that plaintiff's affidavit was insufficient because, like the affidavit in Moore, it was not a "general assertion"; rather, it specified certain questions about which plaintiff's expert could establish an issue of fact, but did not address all of them. In particular, it addressed all of the elements of plaintiff's prima facie case — "duty, breach, causation and damages" — but did not address defendant's affirmative defense. Thus, defendant reasons, because
Plaintiff's response is succinct:
(Citations omitted; emphases in original.) Plaintiff's argument, then, appears to have two points. The first, contained in the second paragraph quoted above, is that defendant's affirmative defense is among the "allegations of the moving party." ORCP 47 E. Plaintiff's affidavit itself is fatal to that argument; it avers that his expert witness will create an issue of fact with respect to "each of the allegations of duty, breach, causation, and damages, against defendant Power Auto, Inc. as set forth in plaintiff's proposed First Amended Complaint." (Emphases added.)
Plaintiff's second argument, contained in the first paragraph above, is that the expert's testimony, while directed toward the elements of plaintiff's complaint, will also necessarily create fact issues with respect to defendant's affirmative defense. That defense, we repeat, contains three elements:
ORS 30.915. Plaintiff's expert could not possibly create a fact issue with respect to the first element because the parties agree that Power Auto did not expressly consent to the addition of after-market floor mats or instruct the purchaser to install them; whether there was implicit consent is a legal and not a factual issue. Further, as we recently explained in Deberry v. Summers, 255 Or.App. 152, 163, 296 P.3d 610 (2013), "[t]he filing of an affidavit under ORCP 47 E precludes summary judgment only where expert opinion evidence is required to establish a genuine issue of material fact." (Emphasis in original.) Whether there was or was not consent is not an issue requiring expert fact or opinion testimony. Rather, it is a question of personal knowledge, not expert knowledge. Id. Nor could any expert create an issue of material fact regarding whether the floor mats were a substantial contributing factor to the injury-causing accident, because plaintiff concedes that fact. And, even if we could imagine that expert testimony related to the "duty" element of plaintiff's prima facie case could, in some circumstances, create a fact issue regarding whether the addition of defective after-market floor mats was reasonably foreseeable and, if so, whether defendant gave adequate warnings, we cannot conclude that the testimony does so without knowing what the subject of the testimony is. Because plaintiff's affidavit addresses duty only as an element of his prima facie case and does not address any elements of the affirmative defense, those elements must be established by evidence in the record
Plaintiff asserts preliminarily that, for two reasons, the defense simply does not apply in this case. First, he asserts that the addition of after-market floor mats was not an "alteration or modification." He argues that "the adding of an `after-market' floor mat * * * is more analogous to an `abnormal use' of a product." He then cites Findlay v. Copeland Lumber Co., 265 Or. 300, 306, 509 P.2d 28 (1973), for the proposition that, under Restatement (Second) of Torts § 402A comment h (1974), abnormal use means "a use or handling so unusual that the average consumer could not reasonably expect the product to be designed and manufactured to withstand it[.]" Because modifying a car by adding floor mats is not unusual, plaintiff reasons, doing so was not an abnormal use and therefore is not a modification or alteration. The problem with that argument is that Findlay was decided in 1973, four years before ORS 30.915 was enacted, and plaintiff points to nothing in the case law or legislative history to indicate that, in adopting that statute, the legislature intended to import into it the concept of "abnormal use," and chose to do so, not by using the phrase "abnormal use" itself, but by using the different phrase "alteration or modification." The two phrases simply do not mean the same thing.
Plaintiff also appears to argue that the alteration or modification defense does not apply here because, as a federal district court explained, if a plaintiff has made out a prima facie case of a dangerous defect, ORS 30.915 is a defense only if the defendant can establish that the alteration or modification, and not the condition of the vehicle when it was sold, caused the accident. Ensley v. Strato-Lift, Inc., 134 F.Supp.2d 1191, 1195 (D.Or.2001). In Ensley, the federal court was interpreting language in an earlier Oregon case, Seeborg v. General Motors Corporation, 284 Or. 695, 700-01, 588 P.2d 1100 (1978):
Again, there are several problems with plaintiff's argument. First, Seeborg does not cite, explain, or even recognize the existence of ORS 30.915; it relies instead on Restatement at § 402A comment g. Second, plaintiff concedes that the floor mats were "essential to the cause of the loss," Seeborg, 284 Or. at 700, 588 P.2d 1100, thereby obviating the need for defendant to prove that fact in order to invoke the modification/alteration defense. Third, the premise of plaintiff's argument is that he has made out all of the elements of a prima facie case; in particular, he has shown that a reasonable juror could conclude that the vehicle in the accident was defective when sold because it lacked floor mats or a floor mat restraint system. Underlying that
Plaintiff's argument, then, relies on his alternative assertion that, even if the modification/alteration defense applies, the record does not establish the elements of the defense as a matter of law. Regarding the first element, plaintiff concedes that there is no evidence in the record that defendant expressly consented to the purchase and installation of any after-market floor mats, much less of defective ones. Rather, plaintiff's argument is that,
We readily conclude that this argument falls well beyond the boundary of what a reasonable juror could find. It would mean that automobile manufacturers and sellers "consent" to the installation of low-quality (including defective) after-market equipment on base models if the manufacturer's higher priced models come with the nondefective equipment as standard. It fails as a matter of law. Defendant proved lack of consent.
Plaintiff concedes that defendant proved the second element: "The alteration or modification was a substantial contributing factor to the personal injury, death or property damage."
That leaves the third element: "If the alteration or modification was reasonably foreseeable, the manufacturer, distributor, seller or lessor gave adequate warning." Defendant does not contend that the installation of after-market floor mats was not reasonably foreseeable; in fact, defendant conceded at oral argument that such installation was foreseeable. Nor does defendant contend that it or the manufacturer gave any warning about that foreseeable risk. Instead, defendant advances three other arguments. First, it cites the Restatement for the proposition that no warnings are necessary "when the danger, or potentiality of danger, is generally known and recognized." Restatement at § 402A comment j. Even if we could presume that section 402A of the Restatement governs the application of ORS 30.915, defendant's argument fails for purposes of summary judgment, because whether the danger of slipping floor mats is "generally known and recognized" is a disputed issue of material fact. ORCP 47 C. Second, defendant argues that no warnings were necessary, because warnings could not possibly have prevented the accident. Plaintiff was involved in an earlier incident when the floor mat made the car accelerate uncontrollably. After that incident, plaintiff removed the floor mats from the vehicle. Thus, he was clearly aware that it was unreasonably dangerous to have that specific floor mat near the vehicle's brake and accelerator pedals. Third, defendant reasons, on the morning of his accident, plaintiff did not realize that the mat had been put back in the vehicle. For those two reasons, defendant maintains, the trial court correctly found that "warnings could not have provided plaintiff or [Lukowitz] with any further information that would have helped avoid plaintiff's crash." In other
A reasonable juror could agree with defendant's reasoning. However, a reasonable jury might also conclude (for example) that an adequate warning is one that is affixed to the driver's side of the vehicle so that it could have been read by the unknown person who put the after-market floor mat into the vehicle after it had been once removed. Additionally, a reasonable juror could find that, had a warning been given to Lukowitz when she bought the car, she would not have purchased the floor mats responsible for causing the accident in the first place. Although we are not averse to exercising our gate-keeping function, see, 259 Or.App. at 100, 100-01, 312 P.3d at 606-07, 607, we also recognize that "the adequacy of a warning ordinarily is a jury question," Benjamin v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 185 Or.App. 444, 455, 61 P.3d 257 (2002), rev. den., 335 Or. 479, 72 P.3d 76 (2003). We are unable to conclude that defendant has established that, as a matter of law, no warnings were necessary.
The trial court erred in granting defendant's motion for summary judgment. An issue of material fact with respect to defendant's affirmative defense remains unresolved.
Reversed and remanded.